ABSTRACT

That many of his collaborators, including some of the most "orthodox," were no great lights, nobody knew better than Freud. He clearly thought that Jung, Adler, and even Stekel were more interesting than the less independent members of his movement. When Paul Haberl in remarked how strange some of them were, Freud replied, according to Binswanger (p. 20): " I have always thought that the first to seize upon my doctrine wou ld be swine and speculators." And when Haberl in asked why Adler and Jung had left h im, Freud is said to have answered: "They wanted to become Pope for once, too."